Superposition eye

compound eye

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Apposition eyes have short ommatidia, each of which focuses on only a small area of the field of view and produces an inverted image. The rodlike rhabdom within each ommatidium acts to average the light received by the eye, and the multiple inverted images that are generated are combined into one overall image in the brain. In contrast, superposition eyes have long ommatidia that allow rays of light to bend prior to entering the rhabdoms. As a result, a superposition eye is able to form a single erect image.

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major reference

Crepuscular (active at twilight) and nocturnal insects (e.g., moths), as well as many crustaceans from the dim midwater regions of the ocean, have compound eyes known as
superposition eyes, which are fundamentally different from the apposition type. Superposition eyes look superficially similar to apposition eyes in that they have an array of facets around a convex structure. However, outside...

aid to nocturnal insects

...eye. In the eyes of insects that fly at night or in twilight, however, the pigment can be withdrawn so that light received from neighbouring facets overlaps to some extent. This is termed a
superposition eye. The image formed is brighter but not as sharp as that formed by the apposition eye. In addition to perceiving brightness, the eyes of insects can perceive colour as well as some...